Tuesday, June 30, 2026--San Antonio
I have read all 3 novels written by Douglas Stuuart including this, his latest, John of John. All 3 have been very good books and each one has been different from the rest. This one is set in a remote Scottish Island-- mostly in a corner of the island where only about 25 people still live. Many homes have been abandoned over the years as people have moved away or died, but they are popular with tourists who buy them to use as vacation homes. Almost everyone living full time in the community belongs to a pentacostal-type Presbyterian church that operates a lot like a cult. It even has a curtain down the center of the sanctuary, and only those who have dedicated their lives to Christ can sit in the front portion. Those who have not yet given their lives to Christ and, therefore, not been baptised must sit behind the curtain. That cult-like us/them situation goes beyond the church, though. The community leaders (all of whom are members of the church, work to influence those in the community to make the "right" decisions. (It all works just like the Southern Baptist Church in my hometown worked to try to control everything related to everyone.) John, the first of the title characters who goes by an abbreviation, Cal, of his middle name since his father uses John (and is the second of the Johns in the title), has left the village to attend an art school which was okayed only because it dealt with "proper" types of art like weaving which most of the families do in the community as a part of a co-op to sell "authentic" Scottish Island wools. But Cal doesn't want to go home after finishing his degree because he doesn't fit in right there and knows that returning would involve his family and the community in trying to manage his life--have him carrying on the sheep farm with and after his father, helping take care of his aging grandmother, and marrying the woman his age who has been friends with him for years, etc. It would be a trap. But the "good" members of the church group have no problems trying to manipulate and force everyone into doing what they want them to do (also like my own church was). The story involves Cal returning and facing all of these problems while rebelling against them to the extent that he can. His mother left his father years ago and is living with his uncle (his father's brother) with whom she has several more children who are his half-siblings. The father has never re-married, so he wants his son to take over the farm. The whole community wants him to marry the girl who has been his friend for years. But there are many secrets behind the stories of everyone and more developing as time passes. It's a book that is fascinating to read and will make you feel like you have been there observing it all. I gave the book 5 stars out of 5.